The Gore Line, A Narrative — Four

This is Chapter Four of eight. In this chapter of the Gore narrative, we are documenting a momentous century in the lives of the men and women in two more generations of our family. They journey from their homes in Roxbury, Massachusetts Colony, to the Connecticut Colony, and eventually find themselves facing the American Revolution.

Our ancestors were born into a world already in transition… before we venture further, it is important to understand some of what had been occurring in the New England area of their births.

The New England Colonies in 1677. (Image courtesy of the National Geographic Society).

Preface: Troubles Brewing — Change is Fomenting

The English Monarchy governed its far-flung colonies by the power of extracting resources, then having those resources shipped to England for their own manufacturing use. These raw materials were then processed into goods (for example, textiles such as blankets), which were then shipped to the North American Colonies, sold and taxed. This scheme worked very well for England, but added to a growing sense of displacement which many Colonists felt about their place in the world. What were their rights to self-governance? How did a distant, far off monarchy fit into their worldviews?

Literally and figuratively, boundaries were shifting.
Literally, with the actuality that colonies, territories, and borders, were all shifting in a state of flux. Unlike today, as we move through a highly-bound, demarcated world, they were somewhat unbound, trying to figure it out as they went along. Figuratively, our ancestors were starting to form a ‘mental map’ of a world which was really quite different from that of their forbearers.

The English Monarchy was also going through some important changes. From essayist Joerg Knipprath: “There have been few times as crucial to the development of English constitutional practice as the 17th century. The period began with absolute monarchs ruling by the grace of God and ended with a new model of a constitutional monarchy under law created by Parliament. That story was well known to the Americans of the founding period.

The Gore family had settled in Roxbury, Massachusetts, which is on the far eastern shore of the North American continent. As time went on, more colonists arrived and land holdings expanded to fill what was available under British governance. People wanted stability and prosperity, but the choices about where to further go were somewhat limited. For the settlers, this meant that ‘you’ needed to expand to the colonies to the north, or to the south. Movement into the western areas, was prohibited, but also, those areas in the 17th century were wilderness, unexplored, and generally hostile. (1)

King Philip’s War

Our ancestors were used to thinking about kings and queens of the European sort, but now they were going to meet a local king, who was new to their understanding. The following is excerpted from the Native Heritage Project article, King Philip’s War:

“King Philip’s War was sometimes called the First Indian War, Metacom’s War, or Metacom’s Rebellion and was an armed conflict between Native American inhabitants of present-day southern New England, English colonists and their Native American allies in 1675–76. The war is named after the main leader of the Native American side, Metacomet, known to the English as “King Philip”. 

“Throughout the Northeast, the Native Americans had suffered severe population losses due to pandemics of smallpox, spotted fever, typhoid and measles, infectious diseases carried by European fishermen, starting in about 1618, two years before the first colony at Plymouth had been settled. Plymouth, Massachusetts, [which]was established in 1620 with significant early help from Native Americans, particularly… Metacomet’s father and chief of the Wampanoag tribe.”

“Prior to King Philip’s War, tensions fluctuated between different groups of Native Americans and the colonists, but relations were generally peaceful. As the colonists’ small population of a few thousand grew larger over time and the number of their towns increased, the Wampanoag, Nipmuck, Narragansett, Mohegan, Pequot, and other small tribes were each treated individually (many were traditional enemies of each other) by the English colonial officials of Rhode Island, Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay, Connecticut and the New Haven colony.”

Over time, “…the building of [Colonial] towns… progressively encroached on traditional Native American territories. As their population increased, the New Englanders continued to expand their settlements along the region’s coastal plain and up the Connecticut River valley. By 1675 they had even established a few small towns in the interior between Boston and the Connecticut River settlements. Tensions escalated and the war itself actually started almost accidentally, certainly not intentionally, but before long, it has spiraled into a full scale war between the 80,000 English settlers and the 10,000 or so Indians.”

Drawing depicting the capture of Mrs. Rolandson during the King Philip’s War between colonists and New England tribes, 1857, Harper’s Monthly. (Image courtesy Library of Congress).

From Wikipedia: “The war was the greatest calamity in seventeenth-century New England and is considered by many to be the deadliest war in Colonial American history. In the space of little more than a year, 12 of the region’s towns were destroyed and many more were damaged, the economy of Plymouth and Rhode Island Colonies was all but ruined and their population was decimated, losing one-tenth of all men available for military service. More than half of New England’s towns were attacked by Natives.” (2)

King Philip’s War began the development of
an independent American identity.
The New England colonists faced their enemies without support
from any European government or military,
and this began to give them a group identity separate and distinct from Britain.

The Name of War: 
King Philip’s War and the Origins of American Identity
by Jill Lepore

Philip Wells and The Dominion of New England,
1686-1689

The institution of The Dominion of New England by the Royal Fiat of King Charles II added to an already existing stew of tensions in the colonies. It didn’t last that long, and Sir Edmund Andros was dispatched by the Colonists fairly quickly. For our family, the most important resulting aspect was this:

The British rulers knew that when you have accurate maps, you have power.

From the Historical Journal of Massachusetts: “The arrival of Wells and Andros’s government in Massachusetts signaled a major change in how the colonists described borders. In late 1686, King James II appointed Edmund Andros as the governor of the Dominion of New England, an administrative body that combined all the colonies.”

“While previously Massachusetts colonists selected their governors, Andros was an imposition from the King. King James II aimed to streamline the administration of the small New England colonies and bring their unruly subjects more directly under imperial control. A stark contrast to the less experienced, agrarian focused, and rurally raised leaders of early New England.

“Although Massachusetts colonists had begun to gradually embrace mapping as a tool after the 1650s, the Dominion, an imperial tool, accelerated this process. Unsurprisingly, Andros employed familiar tools of state building and state power, including maps. He gave Wells a new appointment as the head surveyor for the Dominion and hired at least three deputy surveyors, Richard Clements, John Gore, and John Smith. Each man generally operated in a particular area…John Gore in ‘Napmuge [Nipmuck] Country’ in present-day central Massachusetts.” (3)

Did the Gore Brothers See An Opportunity?

When we first met our ancestor Samuel Gore (1) in The Gore Line — Three, we learned that he had been born in Roxbury, Massachusetts Colony, in October 1652. He was not the oldest surviving son in the family. That distinction belonged to his older brother John (2), who was the (part-time) Writ for the town of Roxbury, and was also a sought-after, skilled surveyor. These positions would have required some degree of formal education, and would be in demand in a fast-growing colony.

Inset: A youthful George Washington surveying at Pope’s Creek, Virginia. (Image courtesy of the National Park Service via Medium). Background: Frontispiece from Samuel Wyld’s The Practical Surveyor (1780). (Image courtesy of the American Philosophical Society, APS).

Notes: As the oldest son, John (2) would have benefited from primogeniture*, which was the standard for that time. (This meant that the Lions Share of the father’s estate went to the oldest son before any other person.) However, this did not always happen in the Northern Colonies, and in his father’s Will of 1657, this did not happen for John (2), as he had already received his portion of his father’s estate. Hence, his younger brother Samuel (1) likely benefited somewhat.

*primogeniture (noun)
– the state or fact of being the firstborn of children of the same parents.
Law. the system of inheritance or succession by the firstborn, specifically the eldest son.

Observation: Additionally, as a surveyor, he was involved in projects which may have influenced the younger Samuel in his choices about where his family would live. They appear to have interacted frequently throughout their lives, as they both did surveying work, and were land-holders themselves. During a time of frequent land speculation, it seems quite likely, that they both benefited from information gained while doing their professions. From the Cameron County Genealogy Project: “Samuel Gore came into the sole possession of his father’s common lands in 1716… On 2 March 1712/13 he was elected one of the Fence Viewers of Roxbury and 3 March 1717 was one of the Surveyors of Highways.” (4)

The New Roxbury Colony, and The Mashamoquet Purchase

The people of Roxbury, Massachusetts Colony had run out of land and they decided to do something about it rather than wait for permission from, or action by, their British Governor-by-fiat, Sir Edmund Andros.

The town of Roxbury was one of the most ancient and influential
in Massachusetts Colony.
The Roxbury people were the best that came from England,
and filled many of the highest offices in the colonial government.

Nothing was lacking for their growth and prosperity
but a larger area of territory, then “limits being so scanty and not capable of enlargement that several persons…
— were compelled to remove out of the town and colony.

Ellen D. Larned
author of The History of Windham County,
page 18

In 1642, the Woodward and Saffery line was established as the southern border of the Massachusetts Colony, and thus, the northern border of the Connecticut Colony. Within a couple of decades of that date, in the rough-and-tumble early Colonial period, the people of Massachusetts wanted more land, and their neighbors to the south in the Connecticut Colony, started to take issue with what they felt was their land. It all got very complicated.

In addition, many skirmishes between the Colonists and the Native American tribes had resulted in King Philip’s War, which had destroyed much infrastructure and weakened both sides. The ‘Indians’ in shock from their defeat, had started to return to their old haunts, which the Colonists were looking to expand into. Perhaps the Roxbury settlers were spurred on by the arrival of The Dominion, because by 1686, boundaries and settlements were changing.

There was a grant for ‘Indian’ lands that consisted of two portions in Nipmuck County — one portion was called Myanexet, and the other Quinnatesset. This land had been acquired by the English representatives William Stoughton and Joseph Dudley; purchased in 1682 from the Indian representative Black James, for £50 by the English Government. From The History of Windham County: Among the first to “The land thus purchased was laid out in June, 1684, by John Gore [2], of Roxbury, under the supervision of Colonel William Dudley.”

This colorful image purports to show George Washington working as a surveyor in Colonial America. We are using it as a stand-in for our ancestor John Gore working with ‘Indian’ guides in the wilds of the Massachusetts and Connecticut colonies.

Circa May 1686 —
“In May, they were visited by Samuel Williams, Sen., Lieutenant Timothy Stevens and John Curtis, who, with John Gore as surveyor, came as committee from Roxbury, ‘to view the land, in order to the laying out of the same; settle the southern bounds (upon or near the colony line)… Eleven days were spent by Mr. Gore in making the needful surveys and measurements — Massachusetts’ South boundary line evaded their search, so they made a station about one and a half miles south of Plaine Ilill, and thence marked trees east and west for the south line of their grant, nearly two miles south of the invisible Woodward’s and Safferys line, thus securing to Massachusetts another strip of Connecticut territory”.

Problems arose due to the perceived position of the Woodward and Saffery line, and then it was not clear who exactly who was at fault with information from 1642. (Remember, earlier maps were not very precise before this period). Ultimately, what was surveyed created problems for both Colonies.

This chart from page 15 of Windham County shows the survey work by John Gore (2) that was completed for the Quinnatesset portion of the land purchase. The horizontal line is the Woodward and Saffery line. Above that line is Massachusetts and below it is Connecticut. The small letter ‘e’ on the left portion is the designation for Samuel Gore (1)’s purchase — the father of John Gore (2). For whatever reason, land purchased by both Thompson and Gore ended up “being-kind-of-ish” in Connecticut, not Massachusetts. This was a problem in the fact that the Colonies were (of course) governed by Britain, and these two colonies had separate governments whose interests were not aligned.

Further excerpted material from Windham County: “No attempt was made to occupy and cultivate these farms by their owners. Thompson’s land remained in his family for upwards of an hundred years, and the town that subsequently included it was named in his honor”.

As time went on, Mashamoquet was the name of a river which was frequently used as a boundry marker. By 1686, the land was known as the Mashamoquet Purchase, and the village settlement was called New Roxbury.

“The survey and divisions (of land) were accomplished during the winter, and on March 27th, 1694, nearly eight years after the date of purchase, the several proprietors received their allotments in the following order: 1, Esther Grosvenor; 2, Thomas Mowry; 3, John Ruggles; 4, John Gore; 5, Samuel Gore [1]’s heirs; 6, Samuel Ruggles; 7, John Chandler; 8, Jacob, Benjamin and Daniel Dana; 9, Benjamin Sabin; 1 0, Thomas and Elizabeth Ruggles; 11, John White; 12, Joseph Griffin… Note that Samuel Gore’s heirs received his allotment of land. Samuel died in 1694, age 41, two years before the division of land in Connecticut was completed”.

In 1690, the village was renamed Woodstock.

Connecticut was originally settled by Dutch Fur Traders. The first English settlers arrived in Connecticut in 1663 under the leadership of Reverenced Thomas Hooker. They were Puritans from the Massachusetts Bay Colony.

“By the settlement of Massachusetts boundary line in 1713… Massachusetts was forced to admit that Woodward’s and Saffery’s line ran some miles south of the bound prescribed by her patent… That Connecticut had a lawful right to the fee as well as jurisdiction of this land no one could deny, but beset by enemies at home and abroad she was forced to yield it to the stronger Colony, and allowed Massachusetts, by formal agreement and covenant, to keep the towns laid out by her in Connecticut territory, and the various grantees to retain possession of this land, receiving as equivalent an equal number of acres in distant localities. Under this arrangement, Connecticut yielded: To the town of Woodstock, 50,410 acres. …To John Gore, 500 acres…

…and in 1749 the town officially chose to became part of Connecticut.

In the more southern portion of the Mashamoquet Purchase, below the village of Woodstock (formerly New Roxbury), another small township was established named Pomfret. It was incorporated in 1713, and is important to the next generation of the Gore Family. (5)

Captain Samuel Gore (2) Marries Hannah Draper

Samuel Gore (2) was born on October 20, 1681, in Roxbury, Massachusetts Colony – died May 27, 1756, in Norwich, Connecticut Colony. He married Hannah Draper about 1703, when he was 22 and she was 17 years old. Hannah was born April 8, 1686 in Roxbury, Massachusetts Colony and died July 11, 1741, in Norwich, Connecticut Colony. They are both buried in the Eliot Burying Ground in Roxbury, Suffolk County, Massachusetts.

Hannah was the daughter of Moses Draper and Hannah Chandler. He was born on September 15, 1664 in Dedham, Massachusetts – died August 14, 1693 in Boston, Massachusetts Colony, age 29. His parents were James Draper and Miriam Stansfield.

Hannah (Chandler) Draper, was born September 19, 1669 in Roxbury, Suffolk, Massachusetts Colony – died June 9, 1692 in Roxbury, Massachusetts, age 22. Her parents were John Chandler and Elizabeth Douglass.

Hannah (Draper) Gore was six years old when her mother died in July 1692. In November 1962 her father, Moses Draper, married Mary Thatcher. A child, Moses Draper, Jr. was born September 12, 1693. However, the father, Moses, had died the month before his birth. By age seven, Hannah was an orphan. Her guardianship was given to her Uncle James Draper on August 1, 1695. It is unclear if she was raised by him, or remained with Mary (Thatcher) Draper and her step-brother Moses. Below is interesting information regarding the settlement by 1715 of Moses Draper’s estate.

All three pages above are from The Drapers In America, Being a History and Genealogy Those of That Name and Connection, by Thomas Wall-Morgan Draper, 1892. Note on the third page (167): A past genealogist wrote-in “Samuel” in pencil, to correct the author’s error about her husband.

Samuel Gore (2) and Hannah (Draper) Gore Family

For the first eleven years of their marriage Samuel (2) and Hannah lived in Roxbury, Massachusetts where the first six of their nine children were born.
Note: CTC = Connecticut Colony, CT = Connecticut State

  • Elizabeth (Gore) Witter, born January 12, 1704 – died April 9, 1761 Preston, CTC
  • Samuel Gore, born March 26, 1705 – died May 22, 1706 (one year old)
  • Samuel Gore (3), born May 29, 1707 – died July 26, 1791 Voluntown, CT
    (We are descended from Samuel 3).
  • Moses Gore, born September 23, 1709 – died 1786 Cornwallis, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada
  • John Gore, born October 11, 1711 – died January 19, 1735, Norwich CTC
  • Obadiah Gore, born July 26, 1714 – died 10 January 1779, of smallpox in Wyoming, Pennsylvania. Notably, he lost several adult children in another Native American ‘Indian War’ — the Wyoming Valley Massacre July 3, 1778.

    Their youngest three were born in Norwich, Connecticut Colony (CTC):
  • Daniel Gore, born September 6, 1719- died October 4, 1719 (one month old)
  • Hannah (Gore) Burrow Gallup, born December 20, 1720 – died March 19, 1810 Stonington, CT
  • Sarah (Gore) Hobart born January 15, 1723 – died July 28, 1743 Stonington, CTC

After his wife Hannah (Draper) Gore died in 1741, Samuel (2) married for a second time to Mrs. Dorcas Blunt on May 13, 1742. (6)

What The Connecticut Charter of 1662 Accomplished

The Conneticut Charter was remarkable for several reasons. From Wikipedia: The English Parliament restored the monarchy in 1660, and King Charles II assumed the English throne. Connecticut had never been officially recognized as a colony by the English government, so the General Court determined that the independence of Connecticut must be legitimized... The key document mapping out Connecticut’s original boundaries wasn’t in fact a map. It was, instead, a royal charter… arguably the most important document in Connecticut’s history—contains among its other provisions a written description of the colony’s boundaries that served the same function as a drawn map.

Charter of the Colony of Connecticut, 1662 – Connecticut State Library.

The document described Connecticut’s western borders extending through Pennsylvania-claimed lands all the way to the ‘southern sea”. From Connecticut History.org: “The ‘South Sea’—what we call the Pacific Ocean—was well known to early navigators, but its exact location in relation to Connecticut Colony was unclear in 1662. What England’s King Charles II effectively granted Connecticut through that grandiose wording was a swath of land some 70 miles north to south, stretching from the Narragansett Bay on the east to the northern California/Oregon coast just west of Mount Shasta...

“Historians have long marveled at the generous provisions of the 1662 royal charter. In addition to the transcontinental footprint, the king also granted Connecticut virtually complete governmental autonomy more than a century before the Declaration of Independence. The charter’s provisions in this regard were so complete that when other states scrambled to create new constitutions at the start of the American Revolution, Connecticut simply replaced the king’s name with ‘the people of Connecticut’ and continued using the charter as its constitution until 1818”.

Observations: It is plausible that these boundaries would could have influenced the choices of the ancestral descendants found further on in The Gore Line after this era. For us in the present day, the ‘western’ boundary became a defining feature of where we grew up in Ohio. (7)

The Houses of Stuart and Orange: Queen Anne (reigned 1702 – 1707), and then she continued as Queen under The House of Stuart, (reigned 1707 – 1714), The House of Hanover, George I (reigned 1714-1727), George II (reigned 1727 – 1760).

The Samuel Gore Family Moves to Norwich in the Connecticut Colony

Observation: Samuel Gore (2), was the son of a carpenter and part-time surveyor, but most importantly, he was connected through his relatives to land investments in New England. Land ownership may have been his primary means of retaining wealth. He may have been a farmer (yeoman), but we doubt that he ever pushed a plow in his early life. He likely leased his lands and had other people to do much of the hard labor. (This may have been different for his children and grandchildren…)

The History of Windham County records that John Chandler, the grandfather of Hannah (Chandler) Gore purchased Pomfret land from Samuel Gore (2) about 1716. It is probable that Samuel (2) had likely acquired the land he sold, through his inheritance from his father Samuel (1). John then moved his family from Roxbury, Massachusetts Colony to Pomfret, Connecticut Colony. Pomfret was then a newly established area formed from the Mashamoquet Purchase.

Additionally, the Weld Collections, by Charles Frederick Robinson, records of Samuel (2)… “He was of Roxbury in 1719, and 20 July, 1734, he was of Norwich, Conn. He sold on the former date [1719] land in Roxbury on the Dedham road, for £420, Hannah his wife releasing her right of dower (SD 57.16)”. It is likely that this land ‘on Dedham Road’ was the original land of Moses Draper, the father of his wife Hannah, (see Drapers in America, p 165 above).

In 1721, Samuel (2) was commissioned Captain of the 5th Company, Connecticut Militia, located in Norwich. (8)

The Susquehanna Company

Can we acquire that land?
… this refrain seems to be a dominant theme for these generations of the Gore Family. From Connecticut History.Org: “In 1753, amidst a flurry of land speculation and westward expansion that captivated the imagination of American colonists, Connecticut settlers formed the Susquehanna Company for the purposes of developing the Wyoming Valley in northeastern Pennsylvania... a shortage of farmland and a growing population had encouraged some in Connecticut to revisit the terms of the colony’s original land grant…” — the one that promised that Connecticut’s borders extended ever westward. See above: What The Connecticut Charter of 1662 Accomplished

“Pennsylvania also had a royal charter, issued in 1681 by the same king, that gave it title to the territory in question. This was not unusual, as the imperial bureaucracy back in England often possessed only rudimentary knowledge of the vast American terrain”.

Map The Part of Pennsylvania that Lies Between the Forks of the Susquehanna, Divided into Townships, ca. 1790s. (Image courtesy of the Library of Congress, Geography and Map Division).

“So, in 1754, when the Susquehanna Company acquired the land for 2,000 pounds from an Iroquois delegation at a conference in Albany, New York, many called the validity of the transaction into question. Settlement of the area (which also included land west of the Wyoming Valley and made up almost one-third of Pennsylvania) quickly became a divisive issue among Connecticut, Pennsylvania, and several tribal nations, as well as within the Connecticut colony itself.”

Samuel Gore (2) and his son, Obadiah Gore, had become members of The Susquehanna Company. As owners of one right, or share, their names appear among the names of the grantees in the Indian deed of July 11, 1754. Twenty-four years later the younger Gore generation would fight in the Battle of Wyoming (a county in Pennsylvania).

Ultimately by 1799, Connecticut gave up any claim it had to lands in Pennsylvania, but this was not before one particularly famous, but truly terrible battle, changed the lives of some of our ancestors. (9)

The Battle of Wyoming (County), Pennsylvania

The situation in Pennsylvania came to a head in the Wyoming Valley Massacre of July 3, 1778. The family of Captain Obadiah Gore did not fare well. (10)

Battle Of Wyoming, 1778 by Alonzo Chapel (1858). Public domain.

“When the Battle of Wyoming was fought, Capt. Obadiah Gore was one of the small company of old men who remained in Forty fort for its defense…” Three of Obadiah Gore’s sons and two sons-in-law died in the Battle of Wyoming that day fighting for The Continental Army. Fully recounted below, more than a century later, in A History Of, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, 1893 edition:

Samuel Gore (3) Marries Desire Safford

Samuel Gore (3) was born on May 29, 1707, in Roxbury, Massachusetts Colony – died July 26, 1791, in Voluntown, Connecticut, USA. He moved with his parents to Norwich, Connecticut sometime in his childhood. He married Desire Safford, February 25, 1735/36 in Norwich, New London County, Connecticut Colony. She was born on October 18, 1717 in Voluntown, Connecticut Colony – died September 11, 1772, same location. Desire was the daughter of John Safford and Dorothy Larrabee.

From Family Search.org: “Before 1881, Voluntown belonged to Windham County, Connecticut, instead of New London County. Much of the land situated in what is now Voluntown was granted to the volunteers of the Narragansett War in 1700. The name Volunteer’s Town turned into what is now known as Voluntown.

Although this map was created in 1856, Voluntown boundaries had stayed the same since Samuel Gore (3)’s lifetime.

Samuel Gore (3) and Desire had nine children. He moved his family from Voluntown, some 14 miles north east of Norwich, and then returned to Norwich, and even later returned to Voluntown. He owned land in both places, and where they were living influenced where each child’s birth was recorded, as noted below — all were born in either Norwich, New London County, or Voluntown, Windham County, Connecticut Colony.
Note: CTC = Connecticut Colony, CT = Connecticut State

  • John Gore, born November 15,1736, Norwich, New London, CTC – died August 15, 1773, Norwich, CT
  • Elizabeth (Gore) Eddy, born December 15, 1738, Voluntown, New London, CTC – died March 14, 1790, Salisbury, Litchfield, CT
  • Hannah Gore, born June 26, 1741, Voluntown, CTC – death date unknown
  • Dorothy (Gore) Titus, born February 6, 1746/47, Norwich, New London, CTC- died 1816, Stirling City, Windham, CT
  • Desire Gore, born April 19, 1750, Norwich, New London, CTC – death date unknown
  • Elijah Gore, born February 11, 1754, Norwich, CTC – died after 1791 Halifax, Windham, Vermont.
    (We are descended from Elijah).
  • Amos Gore, born October 9, 1755, Norwich, New London, CTC- died June 11, 1827, Halifax, Windham, Vermont
  • Esther (Gore) Stafford, born January 22, 1759, Norwich, New London, CTC – October 24, 1836, Halifax, Windham, Vermont
  • Ebenezer Gore, born February 3, 1762, Voluntown, New London, CTC- died September 30, 1790, Killingly, Windham, CT

Observation: Elijah Gore and family along with his siblings, Amos and Lydia (Carpenter) Gore, and Samuel and Esther (Gore) Stafford, moved to Halifax, Windham, Vermont, where they lived for the rest of their lives. Note that the name Windham County (confusingly!) repeats in Vermont.

Samuel Gore (3) was a beneficiary of his father’s estate, so this may have provided him with the economic means to live the life of a gentleman farmer: he was a land-holder, who also did some farming. It also seems that his life was quieter than those of his father’s and grandfathers’ generations. The administrative documents for his estate are interesting, extensive, and quite illegible. In those times, all debts were to be settled when the Will was probated, so sometimes an extensive inventory of assets were necessary.

Comment: The frequent bane of our research, is trying to interpret the poor quill-penmanship of court administrators and census takers! ‘Our hats are off to you’ if you can read the 34 administrative papers!) (11)

First page of the administrative documents for the estate of Samuel Gore (3), circa 1791.

The Last King of America

From Wikipedia.org: “George III’s life and reign were marked by a series of military conflicts involving his kingdoms, much of the rest of Europe, and places farther afield in Africa, the Americas and Asia. Early in his reign, Great Britain defeated France in the Seven Years’ War, becoming the dominant European power in North America and India. However, many of Britain’s American colonies were soon lost in the American War of Independence… [The War] was the culmination of the civil and political American Revolution. In the 1760s, a series of acts by Parliament was met with resistance in Britain’s Thirteen Colonies in America. In particular they rejected new taxes levied by Parliament, a body in which they had no direct representation. The colonies had previously enjoyed a high level of autonomy in their internal affairs and viewed Parliament’s acts as a denial of their rights as Englishmen… The colonies declared their independence in July 1776…” (12)

The House of Hanover, George III (reigned 1760-1820). King George III in his Coronation Robes, by Allan Ramsay, circa 1765. (Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons).

In the next chapter, The Gore Line — Five, we will feature the last of our Gore relatives who live in Connecticut. They venture on to Vermont, and then move westward to New York state. Indeed very soon, the people of the newly formed United States of America begin their westward journey.

Following are the footnotes for the Primary Source Materials,
Notes, and Observations

Preface: Troubles Brewing — Change is Fomenting

(1) — two records

National Geographic | Education
The New England Colonies in 1677
https://education.nationalgeographic.org/resource/massachusetts-1677/
Note: For the map image.

King vs. Parliament in 17th Century England: From Absolutism to Constitutional Monarchy, Influence on American Governing
https://constitutingamerica.org/90day-aer-king-vs-parliament-17th-century-england-from-absolutism-to-constitutional-monarchy-influence-on-american-governing-guest-essayist-joerg-knipprath/
Note: For the data.

King Philip’s War

(2) — seven records

Native Heritage Project
King Philip’s War
https://nativeheritageproject.com/2012/09/02/king-philips-war/
Note: For the text and the image.

King Philip’s War
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_Philip’s_War
Note: For the text.

World History Encyclopedia
Death of King Philip or Metacom
https://www.worldhistory.org/image/13670/death-of-king-philip-or-metacom/
Note: For the illustration.

Encyclopædia Britannica
King Philip’s War
https://www.britannica.com/event/King-Philips-War
Note: For the illustration, Metacom (King Philip), Wampanoag sachem, meeting settlers, c. 1911

A group of Indians armed with bow-and-arrow, along with a fire in a carriage ablaze, burn a log-cabin in the woods during King Philip’s War, 1675-1676, hand-colored woodcut from the 19th century.
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:KingPhilipsWarAttack.webp
Note: For the illustration.

America’s Best History, Pre-Revolution Timeline — The 1600s
1675 Detail
https://americasbesthistory.com/abhtimeline1675m.html
Note: For the illustration depicting the capture of Mrs. Rolandson during the King Philip’s War between colonists and New England tribes, 1857, Harper’s Monthly.

The Name of War: King Philip’s War and the Origins of American Identity
by Jill Lepore
Vintage Books, 1999
Book pages: 5-7
Note: For the pull quote.

Philip Wells and The Dominion of New England,
1686-1689

(3) — one record

Historical Journal of Massachusetts, Winter 2020
Article: Colonial Mapping in Massachusetts, 1629-1688
by Thomas Graves and Phillip Wells
https://www.westfield.ma.edu/historical-journal/wp-content/uploads/2020/Colonial-Mapping-FINAL1.pdf
Downloadable .pdf document, Page 165
Note: For the text.

Did the Gore Brothers See An Opportunity?

(4) — four records

Medium
Ink sketch of young George Washington…
https://medium.com/@NGA_GEOINT/plotting-the-course-5b9a35d24a01
Note: “Ink sketch of young George Washington surveying the area around the Popes Creek plantation. Credit: National Park Service, U.S. Dept. of the Interior, National Park Service Historical Handbook Series No. 26, frontispiece”.
Note: For the illustration.

American Philosophical Society
A Few Technical Items: Questions about 18th Century Surveying Instruments Answered (Part I)
by Erin Holmes
https://www.amphilsoc.org/blog/few-technical-items-questions-about-18th-century-surveying-instruments-answered-part-i
Note: For the background image.

Dictionary.com
primogeniture
https://www.dictionary.com/browse/primogeniture
Note: For the data.

Cameron County Genealogy Project, Gore Family
Contributed by Mike Wennin
https://sites.rootsweb.com/~pacamero/gorefam.htm
Note: For the text.

The New Roxbury Colony, and The Mashamoquet Purchase

(5) — six records

History of Windham County, Connecticut
Volume 1 1600 – 1760
Ellen D. Larned, 1874 edition
https://archive.org/details/historywindhamc01larngoog/page/n10/mode/2up
Note: For the text.

George Washington, Surveyor
https://images.slideplayer.com/9/2519012/slides/slide_1.jpg
Note: For the illustration.

Woodstock, Connecticut
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodstock,_Connecticut
Note: For the data.

Sutori
The Connecticut Colony
https://www.sutori.com/en/story/the-connecticut-colony–koYJgeyWL5FQjAtCQWEP3yzM
Note: For the image and data.

[For the list of siblings]
Lt Samuel Gore Jr
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/40371118/person/28057081430/facts
and
Saved Ancestry Family Trees for Lt Samuel Gore Jr
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/pt/PersonMatch.aspx?tid=40371118&pid=28057081430&src=m
Note: For the data.

Captain Samuel Gore Marries Hannah Draper

(6) — eight records

History of the Town of Stonington, County of New London, Connecticut,
from its First Settlement in 1649 to 1900
by Richard Anson Wheeler
https://archive.org/details/historytownston00wheegoog/mode/2up
Digital pages: 398-399/754
Note: For the data.

The Drapers In America, Being a History and Genealogy Those of That Name and Connection
by Thomas Wall-Morgan Draper, 1892
https://ia600905.us.archive.org/26/items/drapersinamerica00drap/drapersinamerica00drap.pdf
Downloadable .pdf document, Book pages: 165-167
Note: For the data.

Genealogy of the Kennan Family
by Thomas Lathrop Kennan
https://archive.org/details/genealogyofkenna00kenn/page/n7/mode/2up
Book pages: 94-98, Digital pages: 94-98/164
Note: For the data.

The Genealogy of the Payne and Gore Families
Compiled by W. H. Whitmore
https://archive.org/details/genealogypaynea00whitgoog/page/n21/mode/2up
Book Pages: 28, Digital Pages: 38/80
Note: For the data.

Weld Collections
by Charles Frederick Robinson
https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/2558919
and
ibid.
https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/viewer/357789/?offset=0#page=59&viewer=picture&o=download&n=0&q=
Downloadable .pdf document, Section No. 9,
Book page: 59/267, Left column center.
Note: For the data.

Capt Samuel Gore Jr.
[Samuel Gore 2]
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/129489751/samuel-gore
Note: For the data.

Samuel Gore III
[Samuel Gore 3]
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/129491438/samuel-gore?_gl=1*19z07sy*_gcl_au*OTc0NzY2ODkxLjE2OTA5MjM3MzU.*_ga*MTU4MTY5MjA2NC4xNjkwOTIzNzM2*_ga_4QT8FMEX30*OWE5NjcyMGEtZTNmMC00ZjRlLWFjYTctNTNkYzMyMzFmMmY5LjIwLjEuMTY5NjE5NjczMC41OS4wLjA.*_ga_LMK6K2LSJH*OWE5NjcyMGEtZTNmMC00ZjRlLWFjYTctNTNkYzMyMzFmMmY5LjMuMS4xNjk2MTk2NzMwLjAuMC4w
Note: For the data.

What The Connecticut Charter of 1662 Accomplished

(7) — seven records

History of the Connecticut Constitution
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Connecticut_Constitution
Note: For the text.

Connecticut History.org
From the State Historian: The Map That Wasn’t a Map
https://connecticuthistory.org/from-the-state-historian-the-map-that-wasnt-a-map/
Note: For the text and image.

List of English Monarchs
Houses of Stuart and Orange
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_English_monarchs
Note: For their portraits.

List of British monarchs
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_British_monarchs
Note: For the data.

Queen Anne
File:Dahl, Michael – Queen Anne – NPG 6187.jpg
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dahl,MichaelQueen_Anne-_NPG_6187.jpg
Note: For her portrait.

King George I
File:King George I by Sir Godfrey Kneller c.1715-1719.jpg
Note: For his portrait.

King George II
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:King_George_II_by_Charles_Jervas.jpg
Note: For his portrait.

The Samuel Gore Family Moves to Norwich in the Connecticut Colony

(8) — four records

CT Genealogy
Early Settlement of Pomfret Connecticut
by Dennis Partridge
https://connecticutgenealogy.com/windham/pomfret_early_settlement.htm
Note: For the text.

Connecticut Historical Collections, Containing a General Collection of Interesting Facts, Traditions, Biographical Sketches, Anecdotes &c, Relating to the History and Antiquities of Every Town in Connecticut
by John Warner Barber
https://www.google.pt/books/edition/Connecticut_Historical_Collections/zQwWAAAAYAAJ?hl=pt-PT&gbpv=1&dq=John+Warner+Barber&printsec=frontcover
Book pages and Digital pages are the same:
Woodstock, 294-304
Pomfret, 437-440
Norwich, 294-304
Note: For the illustrations.

Maps Of The Past
Historic State Map – Connecticut Colony – 1766 – 23 X 31.56 – Vintage Wall Art
https://www.mapsofthepast.com/colony-of-connecticut-county-map-1766.html

The Susquehanna Company

(9) — two records

Connecticut History.org
The Susquehanna Settlers
https://connecticuthistory.org/the-susquehanna-settlers/

The Gore Family History — Jeff Gore’s Blog
https://jgoredotorg.wordpress.com/2018/05/27/the-gore-family-history/

The Battle of Wyoming (County), Pennsylvania

(10) — three records

The Battle of Wyoming
Painting by Alonzo Chapel, 1858
https://pabook.libraries.psu.edu/literary-cultural-heritage-map-pa/feature-articles/neighbor-vs-neighbor-wyoming-valley
Note: For the battle image.

A History of Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, 1893 edition [only]
by H. C. Bradsby, editor
https://www.google.pt/books/edition/History_of_Luzerne_County_Pennsylvania/4BkVAAAAYAAJ?hl=pt-PT&gbpv=1&dq=A+History+Of+Wilkes-Barre,+Luzerne+County,+Pennsylvania,+c1893,+Chapter+XII&pg=PR6&printsec=frontcover
Book pages and digital pages are the same: 347-348 (Chapter XII)

Gallery photos courtesy of:
Wyoming Commemoration Association Facebook Group
https://www.facebook.com/Wyomingcommemorative/photos

Samuel Gore (3) Marries Desire Safford

(11) — eleven records

Samuel Gore III
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/129491438/samuel-gore?_gl=1*19z07sy*_gcl_au*OTc0NzY2ODkxLjE2OTA5MjM3MzU.*_ga*MTU4MTY5MjA2NC4xNjkwOTIzNzM2*_ga_4QT8FMEX30*OWE5NjcyMGEtZTNmMC00ZjRlLWFjYTctNTNkYzMyMzFmMmY5LjIwLjEuMTY5NjE5NjczMC41OS4wLjA.*_ga_LMK6K2LSJH*OWE5NjcyMGEtZTNmMC00ZjRlLWFjYTctNTNkYzMyMzFmMmY5LjMuMS4xNjk2MTk2NzMwLjAuMC4w

Dorothy Larrabee
https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/LHRW-J5S
and
https://www.familysearch.org/tree/pedigree/landscape/LH2S-MS8
and
https://www.familysearch.org/tree/pedigree/landscape/LH2S-MS8

Elijah Gore
in the Connecticut, U.S., Town Marriage Records, pre-1870 (Barbour Collection)

Voluntown Vital Records 1708-1850
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/225419:1062?tid=&pid=&queryId=1d2415c4e44686d563db8be245d11749&_phsrc=DZs10&_phstart=successSource
Book page: 180, Digital page: 52/122, Lower portion of page.
Note: For the Gore family children born in Voluntown, Connecticut.

Amos Gore
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/43068929/amos-gore

Esther Gore Stafford
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/60666654/esther-stafford

Old Maps
Voluntown , Connecticut 1856 Windham Co. – Old Map Custom Print
https://shop.old-maps.com/connecticut/towns/windham-co-ct-1856-town/voluntown-connecticut-1856-windham-co-old-map-custom-print/
Note: For map image.

Grammarist.com
Hats Off (to You) – Idiom & Meaning In English
https://grammarist.com/idiom/hats-off-to/

Voluntown, New London County, Connecticut Genealogy
https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/Voluntown,_New_London_County,_Connecticut_Genealogy

Samuel Gore
in the Connecticut, U.S., Wills and Probate Records, 1609-1999

https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/2422197:9049?tid=&pid=&queryId=8b401cb68de4c847bc225eb31904b5ab&_phsrc=qGQ4180&_phstart=successSource
Digital pages: 682-716/1402
Note: There are 35 images in this docket.

The Last King of America

(12) — two records

George III
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_III

King George III Coronation Portrait
by Allan Ramsay, circa 1765
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Allan_Ramsay_-_King_George_III_in_coronation_robes_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg
Note: For his portrait.

The Gore Line, A Narrative — Three

This is Chapter Three of eight. Our Gore relatives move from the United Kingdom to the New England Colonies in the New World. The relationship of the Gore(s) to the British Crown, like many others in the Great Migration, was one of physical distance, and then increasingly emotional distance.

In this chapter, we are covering the first two generations of the Gore Family in the Massachusetts Bay Colony.

The Stuarts: King James I (reigned 1603 – 1625), King Charles I (reigned 1625 – 1649), and King Charles II (reigned 1660 – 1685). The Stuarts represent the Union of Scottish and the English Crowns. As such, they were the first kings of the United Kingdom. (1)

The Great Migration, 1620-1640

The term Great Migration can refer to the migration in the period of English Puritans to the New England colonies, starting with the Plymouth Colony and then the Massachusetts Bay Colony, (where the Gore family immigrated to). They came in family groups rather than as isolated individuals and were mainly motivated for their freedom to practice their beliefs.

This religious conflict worsened after Charles I became king in 1625, and Parliament increasingly opposed his authority. In 1629, Charles dissolved Parliament with no intention of summoning a new one, in an ill-fated attempt to neutralize his enemies there, which included numerous Puritans. With the religious and political climate so unpromising, many Puritans decided to leave the country. (2)

A New Era Begins in The American Colonies

Richard and Elizabeth Gore’s son John Gore (John 1 in America), born 1606 in Alton, East Hampshire District, Hampshire – died June 4, 1657 in Roxbury, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, British Colonies. He was interred at the Eliot Burying Ground at the same location. In England, he lived in North Baddesley and Southampton, Hampshire.

In July 1625 John Gore, aged 19, earned a B.A. from Queens College in Cambridge. He married Rhoda Gardner, on July 24, 1627, at Saint Trinity The Less, London Hackney, London. We believe she was born circa 1605, [“Rhoda wife of John Gore deposed on May 19, 1655aged forty-five years or thereabouts”] near Waltham Abbey, Essex, England. By 1635, they had immigrated to Boston, Massachusetts Bay Colony in the British North America. Soon thereafter they moved to Roxbury where they had 10 children, all of them born in Roxbury, except as noted:

  • Mary (Gore) Mylame, born March 1632 (baptized April 1) in England in the parish of Ippolitts in Hertfordshire; the only record we’ve found of her is in her father’s Will
  • John (John 2, in America), born May 23, 1634 in England and baptized in the parish of Ippolitts in Hertfordshire in England – died June 26, 1706
  • Obadiah (I), born June 1636 – died September 1636 (3 months)
  • Abigail (I), born August 1641 – died before May 1643 (1 year)
  • Abigail (II), born May 7, 1643 – died October 31, 1671
  • Hannah, born May 1646 – died July 1686
  • Obadiah (II), born 1648 – died September 3, 1653
  • Gore Twins, birth & death dates unknown (possibly stillborn)*
  • Samuel (1), born June 11, 1651 – died July 26, 1692 (We are descended from Samuel).
    * The birth and death dates for the Gore twins is incomplete and contradictory in various records.

John Gore (1) was one of the few men in Roxbury who were given the honorific title of “Mister”. When he died in 1657, he provided in his Will for his wife and his five surviving children, as follows:

1657 Will of John Gore of Roxbury, Massachusetts Colony.

Rhoda married a second time, about 1659, to John Remington. Documentation found in Volume 3 of the book, The Great Migration…, indicates that “‘on 14 July 1662, Rhoda Gore executrix aforesaid’ stated that she had “some years since married with Lieutenant John Remington of Rowley, and that an event following the marriage had taken place ‘two years since (i.e., two years ago)’”. She married for the third time on June 3, 1674, to Edward Porter. Finally, she married for the fourth time, after February 12, 1677-78 and before May 15, 1679 to Joshua Tidd. 

Rhoda (Gardner) Gore Remington Porter Tidd died August 22, 1693 in Roxbury, Norfolk County, Massachusetts. She outlived three of her husbands, and her burial details are unknown.

In our research on our Gore family we came across a wonderful and very thorough Gore Family History written by a “cousin”, Jeff Gore. We have excerpted some of his writing in our narrative. You can find his complete Gore Family History at: https://jgoredotorg.wordpress.com/2018/05/27/the-gore-family-history/. Thank you, Jeff! (3)

The Massachusetts Bay Colony 

Arrival of the Winthrop Colony, by William F. Halsall,
(W. F. Halsall, Public Domain).

“John and Rhoda Gore arrived at the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1635 with two young children. At the time of their arrival there were only a few thousand colonists in all of New England. This was just fifteen years after the Pilgrims arrived at Plymouth Rock, and five years after John Winthrop founded the city of Boston following the arrival of a fleet containing eleven ships and 700 colonists (see drawing by Halsall above). This was the second attempt by a group of investors to colonize the area, after an unsuccessful attempt in 1623 to establish a settlement further north on Cape Ann. This second attempt was successful, with about 20,000 people migrating to New England in the 1620s and 1630s in what is known as the Great Migration. The Puritans had been embroiled in a long dispute with the Monarchy regarding the practice of their religion, culminating in King Charles I dissolving a rebellious Parliament in 1629.”

Bird‘s-eye-view of Queen’s College, Cambridge by David Loggan, published in 1690, probably drawn in 1685. (Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons).

John immigrated to the American colonies seven years after graduating from Queen’s College in Oxford University (drawing of Queen’s College above is from 1690). Although Harvard would not be founded for another year, Queen’s College was approaching its 300 year anniversary. John was from a wealthy English family, son of Richard Gore (1574-1644) of North Baddesley and Southampton, Hampshire. Richard [had] married Elizabeth Gore (1576- 1650) in 1599 and together they had two sons, John and Thomas.

Research has not revealed what the reasons were regarding John’s decision to immigrate to the Massachusetts Bay Colony with his family.

Plan of Boston showing existing ways and owners on December 25, 1635
George Lamb, creator. ) Image courtesy of the Boston Public Library, Norman B. Leventhal Map Center).

“At the time of John Gore’s arrival, the town of Boston was unrecognizable. Most strikingly, the Back Bay and South End were not yet filled in, meaning that only a narrow spit of land connected the town of Boston to Roxbury and the rest of the mainland (see far left in image above). “The “Field near Colbron’s” will turn into Boston Common, whereas what we refer to as Beacon Hill extends from the region labeled “West Hill” to the original “Beacon Hill” to the South. The town of Boston was still so small that this map could list the name of the owner of each house in the map! (4)

First in Boston, Then Settling in Roxbury


Plan of Roxbury, made by John G. Hales.
(Image courtesy of digitalcommonwealth.org).

“In 1637, John Gore moved to Roxbury, just across the isthmus from Boston, with his wife Rhoda Gardner and the beginnings of their family. Although Roxbury is now a neighborhood within Boston, at the time it was an independent town. It was one of the first towns established in the Massachusetts Bay Colony”.

1839 engraving from Historical Collections, Being a General Collection of Interesting Facts,
Traditions, Biographical Sketches, Anecdotes &c, Relating to the History and Antiquities
of Every Town in Massachusetts, by John Warner Barber. (See footnotes).

“Originally the name was spelled ‘Rocksbury,’ and Barber, in his Historical Collections, says: ‘A great part of this town is rocky land; hence the name of Rocksbury.’ The rocky soil caused challenges for farming, and William Pynchon, the original founder of Rocksbury, gave up on the location just before John Gore settled there and left with a third of the population to settle what became Springfield. Despite these initial challenges, Roxbury eventually became famous for its apples, pears, and other fruits’”.

John arrived in Roxbury with his wife Rhoda on
April 18, 1637 and was one of the few men in the colony honored with the title of “Mister”. He is mentioned in a list of landowners of the year 1643 as owning 188 acres.

When he landed at Boston and passed on Boston Neck to Roxbury, “Mrs Gore was carried by two men, as the ground was wet and swampy. Arriving at Roxbury, the men stopped with their fair burden on a small hill, when Mrs Gore,
who was much fatiqued, exclaimed “This is Paradise”, and the spot was henceforth named “Paradise Hill”.

from the Cameron County Genealogy Project

“In 1638, John was a member of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company, the oldest chartered military organization in North America and the third oldest chartered military organization in the world. Multiple generations of the Gore family stayed in the Roxbury area, and indeed many of the early Gore Family, including John, are buried in the Eliot Burial Ground.

“Finally, John Gore was one of the founders of Roxbury Latin School, and his signature is on the school charter. His son John was an early graduate of the school, studied at Harvard from 1651-1654, and later became a master in 1673 back at Roxbury Latin.

“About 1674 he leased the Bell Homestead in Roxbury for twenty-one years, agreeing [either to] teach the free school, to provide a substitute teacher, or to pay twelve pounds yearly in corn or cattle.” — Cutter

“At the time of his death, John Gore’s estate contained 812 pounds of real estate and buildings, including 4000 acres (over six square miles).” (5)

The Gore Family Home

The Town of Roxbury: its Memorable Persons and Places…
by Francis Samuel Drake, 1828-1885, (Image courtesy of The Internet Archive).

Excerpted from the article Paul Gore, written by Walter H. Marx for the Jamaica Plain Historical Society, in September 1990:

“The Gores prospered and early appear as selectmen in the Town of Roxbury.  Their homestead (see picture from Drake’s ‘Town of Roxbury’ above) stood by Stony Brook (before it was put into a culvert) and Tremont Street near Roxbury Crossing.  A piece of the estate was later sliced off when the railroad to Providence was built. 

The homestead, however, continued to stand until 1876 and was inhabited by the Gores, until the land was sold and cut up as a prize location in a Roxbury that was rapidly becoming industrialized.  The present Gore Street, running parallel to Tremont Street on the west side into Parker Street, still commemorates the ancient Roxbury family and is probably the reason why the municipal government ordered Paul added to the Gore Street in Jamaica Plain to prevent confusion.”

Left: Detail of the 1843 Map of The City of Roxbury, Charles Whitney, cr.
Right: Detail of the Map of the City of Boston and Immediate Neighborhood, Henry McIntyre cr.
(Images courtesy of the Boston Public Library, Norman B. Leventhal Map Center).

“…a happy side effect of the Revolutionary War was that Britain became exceedingly interested in the Boston Area and commisioned a number of maps to be made, the most famous of which is likely the Pelham map.” (6)

A Plan of Boston in New England with its Environs
Henry Pelham, cartographer, Francis Jukes, engraver, published 1777.
(Image courtesy of the Mount Vernon Ladies Association).

Samuel Gore, The Second Generation

“John and Rhoda had ten children, and [we] descend from his son Samuel (1638 – 1692, although some sources list 1651 as [his]birth date). As we have seen in discussions of the original Homestead, many of the descendants of John Gore Jr stayed in the Boston region, whereas many of Samuel’s descendants spread across the Union. Although primogeniture [*]was not commonly practiced in the Northern colonies, there may still have been a difference in inheritance that led to this asymmetry.

*primogeniture (noun)
– the state or fact of being the firstborn of children of the same parents.
Law. the system of inheritance or succession by the firstborn, specifically the eldest son.

Samuel was still relatively young when his father passed away in 1657, but his father’s property should have provided a launching pad for the young Samuel. His mother also received land, and in any case within two years was remarried to Lieutenant John Remington.

Samuel grew up to be a carpenter and, [and also did surveying work] like his father John Gore, served as selectman in Roxbury. In 1689, Samuel was one of the three officers in the military company from the town of Roxbury that took part in what you might consider a prelude to the Revolutionary War that would occur nearly a century later.”

The Houses of Stuart and Orange: King James II (reigned 1685 – 1688), Queen Mary II (reigned 1689 – 1694), and King William III (reigned 1689 – 1703). James II was ousted by Parliament less than four years after ascending to the throne. To settle the question of who should replace the deposed monarch, a Convention Parliament elected James’ daughter Mary II and her husband (also his nephew) William III co-regents, in the Glorious Revolution.

“In 1684, King Charles II revoked the charter of the Massachusetts Bay Colony because the colonial leaders had refused [to] make administrative changes that would have brought the colony under tighter control of the Crown.

In response, King James II–the successor to King Charles II after his passing in 1685–created the Dominion of New England and appointed [the] former governor of New York, Sir Edmund Andros, dominion. This was deeply unpopular among the colonists, and in 1689 there was an uprising in which 2000 militia members rose up and deposed Andros, eventually leading to the restoration of the Massachusetts Bay Colony.

Note: The Dominion of New England is also revisited in The Gore Line — Four.

Observation: Having an education afforded John Gore the ability to be the ‘Writ’ (the clerk) of the local Roxbury government. When you read the ancient records of Roxbury, you are reading our ancestor’s handiwork, see below. (7)

Top image, inset excerpt from: The Town of Roxbury: its memorable people and places…
Background image: The Expulsion of Sir Edmund Andros. (See footnotes).

Samuel Gore (1) Marries Elizabeth Weld

“At the age of 21, Samuel [on August 28, 1672]married Elizabeth Weld (1655-1717). [She was the]granddaughter of Captain Joseph Weld. Joseph Weld was one of the richest men in Massachusetts, and indeed the Weld family has a long distinguished history within the region (William Weld, governor of Massachusetts from 1991-1997, is the most famous living member of the Weld family). Given that the Weld and Gore families both had extensive land holdings in Roxbury, the families would have known each other well. Indeed, both Samuel and Elizabeth were born in Roxbury, with Samuel born four years earlier.”

During their marriage Samuel (1) and Elizabeth had seven children. All of the children were born in Roxbury, Massachusetts.

  • Abigail, born May 29, 1673 – died July 1675
  • John, born November 10, 1676 – died March 10, 1679
  • Child Gore born and died September 24, 1680
  • Samuel Jr. (2), October 20, born 1681 – died May 27, 1756
    (We are descended from Samuel).
  • John, born June 22, 1683 – died November 12, 1720
  • Thomas, born August 16, 1686 – died October 17, 1689
  • Obadiah, born July 13, 1688 – died 8, 1721*

Samuel Gore (1) lived his entire life in Roxbury. “He was Lieutenant in the Military Company of Roxbury in 1689, which took part in the revolution that overthrew the government of Sir Edmund Andros…” [Abbott, Courtright footnote]

Samuel Gore (1) death record, July 4, 1692.

He died on July 4, 1692 at age 41 and is buried at the Eliot Burying Ground in Roxbury, Massachusetts.

*For an interesting side story about a grandson of Obadiah Gore, please see the footnotes. (8)

The Weld Family Was Famous and Prosperous

Map of New England printed by John Seller John in 1675 CE, based on William Reed’s original survey of 1665 CE. (Image courtesy of the Norman B. Leventhal Map Center).

“Elizabeth Weld was the daughter of John Weld (1630-1691) and Margaret Bowen (1623 – 1692). As was the case for most of these early colonists, her family traced their roots back to Wales and England. Captain Joseph Weld (1599–1646) was the youngest of the three brothers who immigrated from England. For his role in the Pequot War of 1637, the colonial legislature granted Weld 278 acres (1.13 km2) in the town of Roxbury. Captain Weld’s land is now much of present-day Jamaica Plain and Roslindale, and in particular the Arnold Arboretum. With the wealth generated from this grant, Joseph Weld became one of the first donors to Harvard and a founder of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company of Massachusetts.”

After Samuel Gore died in 1692, Elizabeth (Weld) Gore married Benjamin Tucker in 1695. He died in 1713 and this left Elizabeth a widow once again. Ten years later in 1723 , aged 68, she married John Smith. Elizabeth (Weld) Gore Tucker Smith died in 1725. It is assumed that she is buried in the Eliot Burying Grounds with her family members. (9)

Women in Colonial America

Throughout the Gore narratives, we have been documenting what we can about our many ancestral grandmothers, but records are scarce. Sometimes we come upon source material that enlightens us as to what was expected of women from that era, and select a passage or two, to share. It can be difficult to understand and to not judge ancestors who held different beliefs from those we hold in the modern era.

A colonial woman’s main duty was to be married and bear as many children as possible to contribute to populating the new American country. It was common for women to have as many as six to twelve children by the time she was 40 – 45. Unfortunately, many of these children did not live into adolescence. A woman could have easily gone through her entire adulthood being pregnant and/or nursing a child. All too often many women died before reaching age 50.

“Women primarily worked at home.”
(Illustration from Women in Colonial America, courtesy of Study.com).

In addition to bearing children a woman’s day of labor began at dawn and ended when the work was completed. From page 108 in Women of Colonial America

“Wherever she lived, whether in a colonial town, on a farm or on the distant frontier, she began her day with a dizzying whirl of daily chores. Her family’s survival often depended upon her skills and efforts – her mastering housewifery.”

“Her duties included management of the house and yard which included dairy (milking, making cheese) planting and tending a kitchen garden, taking care of the hen house and often small animals such as a pig or goat. Of course, she also had to cook, clean the home, make the clothes and care for the children. If the children lived past infancy they were able to help with daily chores, including the farm work”.

Of course, some women did ‘make a name’ for themselves. We have included the following information about Anne Hutchinson because we think it is interesting to understand how women with their own ideas were treated in the very early years of America. Additionally, our ancestor, Joseph Weld and his uncle, the Reverend Thomas Weld, are mentioned. Here is a very brief summary of her story from Women of Colonial America:

Free thought and expression did not go well for Anne Hutchinson.

Anne Hutchinson “A Woman Unfit for Our Society”

Excerpted from page 55: Will and Anne Hutchinson and their eleven children arrived in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1634 as a part of the Puritan movement to America. At that time John Winthrop was the most powerful man, and minister, in the Colony.

“Puritans believed revelation came through scripture interpreted by a minister. Anne claimed God had revealed himself directly to her, a claim considered a vain and arrogant boast for a woman – she placed herself on an equal plane with her betters, the ministers.”

Free thought and expression did not go well for Anne Hutchinson.

On November 7, 1637 at age 46 and during her 16th pregnancy, Anne was tried by a jury of men led by John Winthrop because “she commented, interpreted and preached on church doctrine. She encouraged her followers to evaluate and question their ministers.”

“The men confronting Anne in the Cambridge meetinghouse that day
saw a dangerous threat to authority, a woman who dabbled in matters
not befitting a female. There was something dark, they thought, something of the devil in a woman so bold and sharp-tongued as Mistress Hutchinson.”

Anne was tried for her interpretation of God and her indiscretions to the men of the Puritan church. Her sentence “was to be banished from our jurisdiction as being a woman unfit for our society and are to be imprisoned till the court shall send you away.”

Portrait of John Winthrop of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, date unknown .
(Image courtesy of the World History Encyclopedia).

At this point in Anne’s trial, the Weld(s) are involved.

“That long cold winter Anne lived under house arrest at the home of Joseph Weld.”
(Captain) Joseph Weld was Elizabeth (Weld) Gore’s grandfather. He and his brother, Reverend Thomas Weld, were deeply involved with the Puritan church. Thomas Weld was one of the ministers who took part in Anne Hutchinson’s trial. Eventually, Anne and her family were expelled from Massachusetts Bay Colony and moved on to the Rhode Island Colony.

Other women were thought to be witches and went through some real terror.

The Examination of a Witch (1853), depicting the trial of Quaker preacher Mary Fisher in 1656. Oil on canvas, 97.8 x 137 cm (38.5 x 53.9 in). (Image courtesy of the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts, via Wikipedia Commons).

1692/1693: from Smithsonian Magazine “The Salem witch trials occurred in colonial Massachusetts between early 1692 and mid-1693. More than 200 people were accused of practicing witchcraft—the devil’s magic—and 20 were executed.” (10)

Observation: Some of these Puritan ancestors don’t appear to be (as we would phrase it today) a barrel of laughs...

In Part 4 we will be continuing the story of the Gore(s), writing about the son Samuel Gore (2) and his wife Hannah Draper, covering two generations.

Following are the footnotes for the Primary Source Materials,
Notes, and Observations

(1) — three records

World History Encyclopedia
James I of England
https://www.worldhistory.org/James_I_of_England/
Note: For his portrait.

Study.com
Charles I of England History & Facts
https://study.com/learn/lesson/charles-i-england-history-trial-execution.html
Note: For his portrait.

Charles II of England: History, Family, Reign & Achievements
https://simple.wikiquote.org/wiki/Charles_II_of_England
Note: For his portrait.

The Great Migration

(2) — one record

Puritan Migration to New England (1620–1640)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puritan_migration_to_New_England_(1620–1640)
Note: For the data.

New England, The Great Migration and The Great Migration Begins, 1620-1635
Great Migration, Vol 3, G-H
https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/2496/images/42521_b158314-00000?ssrc=&backlabel=Return
Book pages: 114-120, Digital pages: 197-203/682
Note: For the text.

A New Era Begins in The American Colonies

(3) — twenty-three records

John Gore I
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/38440429/person/29794662765/facts
and
John Goare Sr
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/51080710/person/382429869086/facts
and
John Gore Sr
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/148040209/john-gore?_gl=15iqp3u_gaNjM1OTE4NzE2LjE2NzQxNjc5NjI._ga_4QT8FMEX30*MTY3NDI0Nzk0Mi4yLjEuMTY3NDI2OTc2MC4xNi4wLjA.
Note: For the data.

John Gore in the U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/718912:7486?ssrc=pt&tid=38440429&pid=29794662770
Note: For the data.

Nutfield Genealogy
Surname Saturday ~ Gore of Roxbury, Massachusetts
https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2013/09/surname-saturday-gore-of-roxbury.html
Note: For the data.

Rhoda Gardner
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/38440429/person/29794662770/facts
and
Thoda Gardner Gore
in the U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/721129:7486
and
Rhoda Gore Remington Porter Tidd
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/37144161/rhoda-gore_remington_porter_tidd?_gl=1fdkuhw_gaNDM0NTIxMTQ0LjE2NzQzNDU3MDk._ga_4QT8FMEX30*MTY3NDM0NTcwOC4xLjEuMTY3NDM1NDUwOS41Ny4wLjA.
Note: For the data.

Rhoda Gore
in the U.S., New England Marriages Prior to 1700

U.S., New England Marriages Prior to 1700 for Rhoda Gore
Second Supplement To Torrey´s New England Marriages Prior to 1700
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/900183268:3824
Note: For the data.

Rhoda Gore in the U.S., Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889-1970
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/12954:2204
Digital pages: 512-513/651
and
Rhoda Gore Remington Porter Tidd
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/51080710/person/382429870496/facts
and
Rhoda Tidd 
in the Massachusetts, U.S., Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988

Roxbury
Births, Marriages, Deaths Publishments, 1630-1844
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/43486033:2495?ssrc=pt&tid=47996627&pid=20148939490
Digital page: 86/243, Left page, entry for August 22.
and
Rhoda Tidd (unknown)
https://www.geni.com/people/Rhoda-Tidd/6000000000112109712
and
Rhoda Gardner
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/47996627/person/20148939490/facts
Note: For the data. The information on Rhoda’s parents is incorrect.

The Courtright (Kortright) family: descendants of Bastian Van Kortryk,
a Native of Belgium Who Emigrated to Holland About 1615
by John Howard Abbott
https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/viewer/130441/?offset=0#page=2&viewer=picture&o=info&n=0&q=
Book pages: 106-110, Digital pages: 110-114/153
Note: For the data. Some date details are incorrect.

John Gore
New England Historical Genealogical Register Online
https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/New_England_Historical_Genealogical_Register_Online
Note: For the copy of his Will.

The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Volume 8, 1854
by New England Historic Genealogical Society
https://books.google.pt/books?id=IhHtlHzeygYC&printsec=frontcover&hl=pt-PT&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false
Book page: 282
Note: For the data.

WMGS Members’ Genealogy
The Gore Family of Roxbury: New Evidence and Suspected Connections
by Douglas Richardson
https://trees.wmgs.org/showsource.php?sourceID=S267&tree=Schirado
Note: For the data.

Dawes-Gates Ancestral Lines : A Memorial Volume Containing the American Ancestry of Rufus R. Dawes, Vol. I, 1943
Compiled by Mary Walton Ferris

https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/11708/ Vol I. Gore
Book pages: 320-325, Digital pages: 354-360/1773
Note: For the data.

John Gore
in the Massachusetts, U.S., Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988

Roxbury > Births, Marriages, Deaths Publishments, 1630-1844
https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/2495/records/43485741?tid=&pid=&queryId=6b685af7-cede-4892-b3a5-86ce74f4f577&_phsrc=wVz1&_phstart=successSource
Book page (original from transcription): p. 182, Digital page: 81/243
Note: For the data. John Gore death, first entry for June 1657, right page.

Cameron County Genealogy Project
Contributed by Mike Wennin
https://sites.rootsweb.com/~pacamero/gorefam.htm
Note: For the text.

History of the Town of Stonington, County of New London, Connecticut,
from its First Settlement in 1649 to 1900
by Richard Anson Wheeler
https://archive.org/details/historytownston00wheegoog/mode/2up
Digital pages: 396-398/754
Note: For the data.

The Genealogy of the Payne and Gore Families
Compiled by W. H. Whitmore
https://archive.org/details/genealogypaynea00whitgoog/page/n21/mode/2up
Book Pages: 26-30, Digital Pages: 38-42/80
Note: For the data.

The Massachusetts Bay Colony

(4) — four records

The Gore Family History — Jeff Gore’s Blog
https://jgoredotorg.wordpress.com/2018/05/27/the-gore-family-history/
Note: For the text.

WikiTree
Arrival of Winthrop’s Company in Boston Harbor (1630)
by William Formby Halsall (painted ca. 1880)
https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/Puritan_Great_Migration_Editing_Guidance-1
Note: For the ship(s) painting.

File: Queens’ College, Cambridge by Loggan 1690
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/df/Queens%27_College%2C_Cambridge_by_Loggan_1690_-quns_Loggan1685.jpg/1280px-Queens%27_College%2C_Cambridge_by_Loggan_1690-_quns_Loggan1685.jpg
Note: For image of the college.

Boston Public LIbrary
Norman B. Leventhal Map & Education Center Collection
Plan of Boston showing existing ways and owners on December 25, 1635
by George Lamb
https://collections.leventhalmap.org/search/commonwealth:9s161947r
Note: For the map image.

First in Boston, Then Settling in Roxbury

(5) — four records

The Gore Family History — Jeff Gore’s Blog
https://jgoredotorg.wordpress.com/2018/05/27/the-gore-family-history/
Note: For the text.

Digital Commonwealth
Massachusetts Collections Online
Plan of Roxbury made by John G. Hales, dated 1830
https://www.digitalcommonwealth.org/search/commonwealth:25152n00g
Note: For the map image.

The Town of Roxbury: its Memorable Persons and Places…
Francis S. Drake, 1828-1885
https://archive.org/details/townofroxburyits00drak/page/320/mode/2up
Book Page: 321, Digital Page: 320/475
Note: For the data.

Historical Collections, Being a General Collection of Interesting Facts, Traditions, Biographical Sketches, Anecdotes &c, Relating to the History and Antiquities of Every Town in Massachusetts
by John Warner Barber
https://books.google.pt/books?id=XYEUAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover&hl=pt-PT&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false
Book pages: 482-486
Note: For the data.

The Gore Family Home

(6) — six records

The Gore Family History — Jeff Gore’s Blog
https://jgoredotorg.wordpress.com/2018/05/27/the-gore-family-history/
Note: For the text.

Jamaica Plain Historical Society
Paul Gore
https://www.jphs.org/people/2005/4/14/paul-gore.html
Note: For the data.

The Town of Roxbury: its memorable persons and places, its history and antiquities, with numerous illustrations of its old landmarks and noted personages
Francis Samuel Drake
https://archive.org/details/townofroxburyits00drak
For The Revolution of 1689: Book page 19, Digital page: 18/475
Note: For the data.

Map of the City of Roxbury
https://collections.leventhalmap.org/search/commonwealth:9s161f230
Note: For the map image.

Map of the City of Boston and Immediate Neighborhood : from original surveys
https://collections.leventhalmap.org/search/commonwealth:3f4632536
Note: For the map image.

A Plan of Boston in New England with its Environs
by Henry Pelham, cartographer; Francis Jukes, engraver, 1775-1777
https://encyclopediavirginia.org/4702hpr-66c692627255665/
Note: For the map image.

Samuel Gore, The Second Generation

(7) — four records

The Gore Family History — Jeff Gore’s Blog
https://jgoredotorg.wordpress.com/2018/05/27/the-gore-family-history/
Note: For the text.

Dictionary.com
primogeniture
https://www.dictionary.com/browse/primogeniture
Note: For the data.

List of English Monarchs
Houses of Stuart and Orange
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_English_monarchs
Note: For their portraits.

1689 Boston Revolt
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1689_Boston_revolt
Background image source:
File:AndrosaPrisonerInBoston.png
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:AndrosaPrisonerInBoston.png
Note: For the data and image.

Samuel Gore Marries Elizabeth Weld

(8) — eight records

The Gore Family History — Jeff Gore’s Blog
https://jgoredotorg.wordpress.com/2018/05/27/the-gore-family-history/
Note: For the text.

Jamaica Plain Historical Society
The Weld Family
https://www.jphs.org/people/2005/3/14/the-weld-family.html
Note: For the text.

Weld Collections
by Charles Frederick Robinson
https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/2558919
and
ibid.
https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/viewer/357789/?offset=0#page=59&viewer=picture&o=download&n=0&q=
(Downloadable pdf) Book page: 59/267
Note: For the data.

The Genealogy of the Payne and Gore Families
Compiled by W. H. Whitmore
https://archive.org/details/genealogypaynea00whitgoog/page/n21/mode/2up
Book Pages: 26-30, Digital Pages: 38-42/80
Note: For the data.

Genealogy of the Kennan Family
by Thomas Lathrop Kennan
https://archive.org/details/genealogyofkenna00kenn/page/n7/mode/2up
Book pages: 94-98, Digital pages: 94-98/164
Note: For the data.

Samuel Gore
in the Massachusetts, U.S., Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988

Roxbury > Records Births, Marriages, Deaths, 1630-1785
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/43450206:2495?ssrc=pt&tid=73698554&pid=78019623135
Digital page: 35/115
Note: For his death record. Left page, entry 2 from the bottom.

*Regarding Obadiah Gore,
from The Gore Family History — Jeff Gore’s Blog
https://jgoredotorg.wordpress.com/2018/05/27/the-gore-family-history/

We wanted to share the following because it is quite interesting:

“…it is worth mentioning that one of Samuel Gore Sr.’s other sons, Obadiah Gore, was the grandfather of Christopher Gore (1758 – 1827), who was a well-known lawyer, financier, and politician. He served as Governor of Massachusetts as well as US Senator from Massachusetts. His summer home, Gore Place (image above), is in Waltham and can still be visited. In addition, the former library at Harvard, Gore Hall, was named after Christopher (donations by the childless Christopher probably helped…). Gore Hall played a major role in the history and identity of the City of Cambridge, and indeed an image of Gore Hall is in the official seal of Cambridge (below). Unfortunately, Christopher Gore did not have any children”.

The Weld Family Was Famous and Prosperous

(9) — five records

The Gore Family History — Jeff Gore’s Blog
https://jgoredotorg.wordpress.com/2018/05/27/the-gore-family-history/
Note: For the text.

Elizabeth Weld
in the Massachusetts, U.S., Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988

Roxbury > Records Births, Marriages, Deaths, 1630-1785; Vol. 1
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/43457021:2495?tid=&pid=&queryId=745a397cad972b36c88900114e9a711f&_phsrc=udC9&_phstart=successSource
Digital page: 8/168, Left page, entry 9 [borne] November 14.
Note: For her birth date.

Elisebeth Weld
in the Massachusetts, U.S., Compiled Birth, Marriage, and Death Records, 1700-1850

Roxbury
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/91619543:61401?tid=&pid=&queryId=f9f0ed1b4c6cb58fba34bd64ce57a8db&_phsrc=iQQ14&_phstart=successSource
Book page: 174, Digital page: 572/1080
Note: For her marriage to Samuel Gore, 1672, Lower middle of page.

Elizabeth Tucker
in the U.S., New England Marriages Prior to 1700

Marriage to Benjamin Tucker, 1695
New England Marriages Prior to 1700
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/170884:3824?tid=&pid=&queryId=d2f2b2b4b8c5f28a262df4364d572d78&_phsrc=udC14&_phstart=successSource
Book page: 174, Digital page: 771/1022
Note: For her marriage to Benjamin Tucker, Lower middle of page.

Elizabeth Tucker
in the Massachusetts, U.S., Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988

Roxbury > Records Births, Marriages, Deaths, 1630-1785
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/66339175:2495?tid=&pid=&queryId=30a6e31fedac6ede9684cb128a297249&_phsrc=iQQ8&_phstart=successSource
Digital page: 62/115
Note: For her marriage to John Smith, 1723, Left page, center.

Women in Colonial America,
Anne Hutchinson “A Woman Unfit for Our Society”

(10) — five records

Women of Colonial America
13 Stories of Courage and Survival in the New World, page 55 & 108
by Brandon Marie Miller
https://www.chicagoreviewpress.com/women-of-colonial-america-products-9781556524882.php
Note: For the text.

Study.com
Women in Colonial America
https://study.com/learn/lesson/women-in-colonial-america-roles-rights-significance.html
Note: For the illustration, “Women worked primarily in the home.

John Winthrop, Governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony
by A follower of Anthony van Dyck [attribution]
https://www.worldhistory.org/image/13016/john-winthrop-governor-of-massachussets-bay-colony/
Note: For his portrait.

Smithsonian Magazine
A Brief History of the Salem Witch Trials
One town’s strange journey from paranoia to pardon
by Jess Blumberg
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/a-brief-history-of-the-salem-witch-trials-175162489/#:~:text=The%20Salem%20witch%20trials%20occurred,magic—and%2020%20were%20executed.
Note: For the text.

File:Examination of a Witch – Tompkins Matteson.jpg
by T.H. Matteson, 1853
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Examination_of_a_Witch_-_Tompkins_Matteson.jpg
Note: For the painting image.